|

January 16, 2000
By JOHN STUCKE of the Missoulian
Montana
man's business offers South American tours
Brian Morgan has a twist to Montana tourism.
From his home office perched in the Rattlesnake Mountains,
he uses the Internet to lure travelers to his tours - treks
that capture regional culture and offer stunning scenery.
His customers, adventuresome sorts, pay to have guides usher
them from place to place while offering tidbits of local
color and history. The guides also serve as interpreters.
You see, Morgan doesn't bring people
to the remote reaches or must-see vistas of Montana. Rather,
he takes them to South America.
At 26 years old, the Havre native
is plying his training with his wanderlust. After earning
a masters in economics from the University of Montana and
spending a year in Russia, Morgan moved to Ecuador. He soon
landed some consulting work with CARE, writing a proposal
to fund an effort to curb forest clearing along the Pacific
coast while offering economic incentives to the people living
there.
During his time in Ecuador, however,
he became homesick, reading Montana-based novels. It was a
time he thought about leveraging his business skills with
his desire to travel. So he returned home to Montana and started
Adventure Life. After choosing Havre as the base, he designed
an amateurish brochure he hoped travel agents would dispense
to customers. They didn't, his business struggled to become
recognized and his business flopped.
"Here I am, a young kid with
a scheme to bring people to Ecuador," he remembered during
a recent interview. "No one called. I was just another
flier."
Then he took a job in Missoula
that lasted a few months and decided to try again. This time
he arranged a $10,000 line of credit from his local bank in
Havre and tapped it to buy a laptop computer and design a
Web page at www.adventure-life.com. He learned more about
the eco-tourism business, found a successful company offering
some of the same types of tours he wanted to offer, and redesigned
his brochure and sales pitch. Then he spent some money on
Internet advertising. Soon after, he landed his first four
bookings and the company has been busy since.
To make it work, Morgan's company
takes groups of up to 12 people on intimate tours of the coasts,
mountains and jungles of Ecuador and Peru. Once, he had a
guide take one man: "We'll never cancel a trip. I'll
take a single and that's the way it is." Morgan uses
a network of handpicked guides from the villages and tries
to give his customers a trip immersed in the culture.
To gain customers, he advertises
heavily on the Internet, where anybody in the world with a
computer and a modem can learn about his company and take
steps to book a trip. That's how Gracia Schall learned about
Adventure Life, and she's from Missoula.
"A friend of mine found him
on the Internet. We had no idea he was from Montana, but it
has made it a fun connection," said Schall, who works
as a private practice counselor. She took a Peru trip with
Adventure Life, and found the fledgling company to be a professional
outfit that offered a trip with an environmental perspective
and extra attention paid to the details of regional culture.
Instead of joining a throng of
Americans being bused from one tourist hot spot to the next
before retiring for evenings at Western hotels, Schall described
her tour as a busy schedule, but one with time for exploration
and discovery away from the group. Buying foods at a farmers
market, watching the local weavers, or wandering in the towns
or countryside, Schall said the tour often avoided the kinds
of places foreign tourists congregate. Having a smaller group
headed by local guides also gave Schall's tour a few unforeseen
benefits. During her Peru trip, train workers went on strike
the day her group was supposed to travel to Machu Picchu,
an ancient Incan city high in the Andes. Instead of a lost
day, Schall recalled, Morgan quickly arranged another ride.
Because the group was small, Morgan was able to work with
the local people to figure out the best alternative. The trip
worked and the group returned with a good story, she said.
"Sometimes things don't go
as planned."
Morgan said he hopes the people
taking his tours return with more than pictures and memories.
His travel brochures are filled with pictures of locals in
their colorful dress going about their everyday lives - ones
far different than those in the United States.
"I have tours that just do
the natural wonders, but the tours I really love are the ones
where you encourage an understanding of the people."
Already, he said his company is
an economic contributor in Ecuador. One where his travelers
spend their money purchasing goods and services from the local
people, not American companies doing business in the country.
With Adventure Life, groups don't stay in five-star hotels
and eat American food. They stay in Peruvian hotels run by
the locals. Secondly, he wants to build Adventure Life into
an educational venue for students interested in a language
immersion program. Lastly, the company can be one that helps
the cause of conservation.
One segment of the tours are trips
into the jungle, areas that are being cut and burned to make
room for agriculture while destroying one of the most biologically
diverse places on the planet. But travelers shouldn't expect
to be preached at. Morgan said his guides are locals who live
with the complexities of a country's appetite for development
while concerns about culture and the environment abound.
He hopes the company can find a
niche that isn't filled by glitzy tours or other trekking
companies that offer American perspectives and guides while
touring foreign countries.
"I really think there's a
vacuum in the U.S. market for what my company is going to
offer," he said.
Also, the company is good for Montana,
Morgan added. A travel agency in Kalispell books competitive
flights to South America, and Morgan said he plans to purchase
as much business equipment and services as he needs in Montana.
As he puts it: "I'm a business that wasn't here two years
ago, with customers from around the world spending money (in
South American countries) and Montana."
|